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Wireless Internet Setup
Posted: 2006-03-16 12:07am
by Alyeska
I am trying to get a wireless internet setup at my house while still preserving the wired network at the same time.
Right now the Cable modem runs into the router which then sends the connection to the rest of the computers.
Is it possible to get a wireless router hooked into the network router, or do I need to get a wireless switch?
Posted: 2006-03-16 12:21am
by Praxis
Replace the wired router with a wireless router. My wireless router also has five regular wired ethernet ports (one for the cable modem, four for PC's). I have two computers connected via a direct wire and three wireless.
Posted: 2006-03-16 12:25am
by Executor32
Most wireless routers I've seen have Ethernet ports on them, so you could just replace the old router with a wireless one. Hell, I don't even use the wireless capability of my router, I just use it as a 4-port wired router.
Posted: 2006-03-16 12:30am
by InnocentBystander
Purchase a wireless access point. Such as the
Linksys WAP54G. Just plug into your current router.
Posted: 2006-03-16 12:45am
by The Kernel
You could do a wireless bridge, but with wireless routers at ~$40 for Netgear/Linksys models, it's probably cheaper just to use a new router.
Posted: 2006-03-16 01:10am
by InnocentBystander
Most wireless routers can be added to your orignal configuration and it should work just fine, though it might take slightly more to setup it up.
Posted: 2006-03-16 01:50pm
by Vertigo1
Just don't get the WRT54G router, unless you're absolutely sure its not a version 5 router. I'm stuck with one at the moment, and I absolutely hate the fucking thing! God damn thing locks up every few days, and the only way to reboot the damn thing is to powercycle it. The original firmware it came with would lock it up every fucking night! (running 1.00.6 atm)
Read this so you can see the difference. If you're curious about the internals, then
click here.
Posted: 2006-03-16 02:36pm
by Laird
I'd go with the WAP idea, that's what I did at home.
Posted: 2006-03-16 03:12pm
by Pu-239
Vertigo1 wrote:Just don't get the WRT54G router, unless you're absolutely sure its not a version 5 router. I'm stuck with one at the moment, and I absolutely hate the fucking thing! God damn thing locks up every few days, and the only way to reboot the damn thing is to powercycle it. The original firmware it came with would lock it up every fucking night! (running 1.00.6 atm)
Read this so you can see the difference. If you're curious about the internals, then
click here.
Get the WRT54
GL
I got a WRT54Gv5, returned it and just got a WRT54Gv4
Internet keepsdropping out every so often anyway though, but maybe that's due to WPA-EAP enabled.
Posted: 2006-03-16 03:45pm
by Stark
I just plugged one of those massively overpriced Apple APs into my switch. All one big happy net-sharing network. WEP2, even.
Posted: 2006-03-16 10:59pm
by Alyeska
Can someone recomend a good wireless network router that also has atleast 3 network ports for wired connections?
Posted: 2006-03-16 11:33pm
by Executor32
I've got a D-Link DI-524, which has 4 network ports (5 if you include the WAN port). I've had no problems with it whatsoever, and it's just like using my old DI-604 with wireless settings added to the configuration page. Mine came in the DWL-922 Wireless G Network Starter Kit, which also includes a DWL-G122 Wireless G USB Adapter. The kit effectively cost me $29.99 at Best Buy ($69.99 with a $40 mail-in rebate).
Posted: 2006-03-17 09:15pm
by Alyeska
Well I bought a linksys router like Laird suggested and I have it all setup and opperating. Simple WPA protection with a nice randomized password. Also given the distance (only two houses in range), I think this is nice and secure.
Posted: 2006-03-18 12:34pm
by Laird
Alyeska wrote:Well I bought a linksys router like Laird suggested and I have it all setup and opperating. Simple WPA protection with a nice randomized password. Also given the distance (only two houses in range), I think this is nice and secure.
Hooray.